This Thai Mobile Phone Advert Is The Biggest Tear-Jerker Ever (VIDEO)

Think of Rose lying on that broken door by the sinking Titanic, shaking her beloved Jack. Mufasa falling off that cliff. Bambi's mother. The grandfather in Up.

You ain't seen nothing yet. Not till you watch this advert for a Thai mobile phone company.

The three-minute long film for TrueMove, which has more than three million views on YouTube, tells the story of a kindly father, unexpectedly rewarded for his good deed of thirty years ago.

HuffPost UK dares you not to get a lump in your throat.

Also on HuffPost:

Close



12 Ads Companies Don't Want You To See

of





After being roundly criticized for what many saw as a racist ad, PepsiCo pulled the Mountain Dew ad, developed by rapper Tyler the Creator. The ad showed a battered woman attempting to identify a suspect from a lineup of black men.

While these ads were never officially released by Ford, the company eventually apologized for a series of mock-up print ads that depicted gagged and bound women in the rear of a hatchback the company makes in India. Included in the series is a caricature of someone who appears to be former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. Another shows Paris HIlton kidnapping the Kardashian sisters.

Taco Bell elected to cancel an ad for its variety 12-pack of tacos after receiving complaints that it discouraged people from eating their veggies.

Reebok got a veritable slap in the face from consumers when they received numerous complaints over an ad it ultimately pulled that urged men to "cheat on your girlfriend not on your workout."

General Motors pulled its notorious "Fu Manchu" commercial for the new Chevrolet Trax SUV after it received negative feedback about the ad's song.
Here's a sample of the lyrics:
Now, in the land of Fu Manchu,
The girls all now do the Suzie-Q,
Clap their hands in the center of the floor,
Saying, "Ching, ching, chop-suey, swing some more!"

After a video depicting a man's failed suicide attempt went viral and incited backlash, Hyundai issued an apology and made an aggressive push to wipe away the ad. The company also claimed that the ad was made “without Hyundai’s request or approval,” according to Time.

Nike was quick to pull an ad featuring Oscar Pistorius with the words "I am the bullet in the chamber" after the Olympic blade-runner was charged with shooting and killing his girlfriend.

Yoplait withdrew a commercial for its Raspberry Cheesecake Yoplait Lite after it was criticized for allegedly promoting eating disorders.

McDonald's apologized for an ad that parodied mental health outreach. The fast food chain denied the ad was ever approved by its marketing team in the first place.

Burger King pulled its Texican Whopper ad that aired in Europe after complaints the commercial perpetuated negative stereotypes of Mexicans, the New York Daily News reports.

Dunkin' Donuts yanked an ad featuring Rachael Ray wearing a scarf after conservative blogger Michelle Malkin said the scarf resembled a traditional Muslim head dress, also known as a keffiyeh, which Malkin said, "has come to symbolize murderous Palestinian jihad." "Absolutely no symbolism was intended," Dunkin' Donuts wrote in response at the time.

Accused of being distasteful, VisitDenmark ultimately pulled a viral ad that depicted a Danish mother trying to find the tourist father of her baby. One sociologist argued to CNN that the ad was meant to convince potential tourists that they can “lure fast, blond Danish women home without a condom.”